Resources

Blog

Why Companies Are Still Unprepared for the EMV Transition

While the national transition to Europay, MasterCard and Visa, known as EMV or “Chip and PIN,” is well underway, a recent study found that as many as 42 percent of companies have either taken no steps or are unaware of any progress being made to meet the October 1, 2015, deadline. The EMV readiness study conducted by Randstad Technologies, which...
Blog

The Four 'C's' of a Nigerian Payment Diversion Scam

419 scams are one of the oldest and most common tricks used by fraudsters to extort money from online users. These schemes promise victims a large sum of money in exchange for a small upfront payment. In this sense, ploys, such as the Nigerian Prince scam, resemble social engineering attacks to the extent that they rely less on the expertise of the...
Blog

Password Brute Force Attacks Threaten Millions of App Users

In September of 2014, private photos of a number of celebrities, including Kate Upton and Jennifer Lawrence, were leaked onto the image-based bulletin board 4chan. It was soon discovered that this leak occurred as a result of a brute force attack against Apple's iCloud, which until then had not limited the number of login attempts for each user...
Blog

Corporate Espionage Risk Management For Financial Institutions

In the financial industry, business success and sustainability depends on the health of information systems. Damage to a firm’s information systems can tarnish its reputation, compromise its data, as well as result in legal fines and penalties. Large firms often depend on thousands of such systems interconnected via the internet, which raises a...
Blog

DEF CON 23 Preview: Confessions of a Professional Cyber Stalker

I am honored to be presenting at DEF CON 23 this August in Las Vegas where I will be presenting a session titled “Confessions of a Professional Cyber Stalker." In my talk, I will be discussing various technologies and methods I developed and used to track criminals leading to at least two dozen convictions. Many times in the process of recovering...
Blog

Escalation of Commitment Part 2: Three Possible Scenarios

Following from a recent post on ‘Escalation of Commitment’, a topic studied by both Economists and Psychologist, I could not resist writing a follow-up to explore the consequences for third parties that do not have the preparation and/or resources of the parties involved in scenarios of escalation of commitment in the IT security field. In the...
Blog

Ashley Madison Hack Threatens to Expose 37 Million Adulterers

Source: Krebs on Security A recent hack at Ashley Madison, an online cheating website, could expose the personal information of 37 million users. According to Brian Krebs, who broke the story on his blog, a group of hackers known as The Impact Team have all ready released some sensitive internal data...
Blog

Infosec Influencers: An Interview with Bruce Schneier

This week, as part of our new "Infosec Influencer" series, I had the pleasure of sitting down with Bruce Schneier, an internationally renowned security technologist and one of The State of Security's Top Influencers in Security You Should Be Following in 2015. He has written 12 books, including Liars and Outliers: Enabling the Trust Society Needs to...
Blog

MiniDionis: Where a Voicemail Can Lead to a Malware Attack

For just over a week, government departments, research institutes and other high-value targets have been on the sharp end of a sophisticated attack, where fake voicemails are being used to create a diversion while malware infects computer systems. As security researchers at Palo Alto Networks's Unit 42 division detail, it is believed the attack is...
Blog

Attack Exploits Weaknesses in RC4 Algorithm to Reveal Encrypted Data

Two Belgian security researchers have developed a method that allows an attacker to exploit weaknesses found in the RC4 encryption algorithm and subsequently expose information that was once thought to be encrypted. According to a blog post written by Mathy Vanhoef and and Frank Piessens of the University of Leuven, their RC4 NOMORE attack...
Blog

Automating Email Phishing with SPF

Due to the increased number of reported high-profile attacks, it is likely that you have heard of "phishing". What exactly is phishing? At its core, phishing is the sending of an email to a target with the intent of having the target perform some action that will lead to the attacker gaining some new piece of information or access. While the...
Blog

VERT Threat Alert: July 2015 Patch Tuesday Analysis

Today’s VERT Alert addresses 14 new Microsoft Security Bulletins. VERT is actively working on coverage for these bulletins in order to meet our 24-hour SLA and expects to ship ASPL-623 on Wednesday, July 15th. MS15-058 SQL Server Elevation of Privilege Vulnerability CVE-2015-1761 SQL Server Remote Code Execution...
Blog

Microservices, SSL Everywhere, and Your Sanity

It is always the case that changes – particularly radical changes – to application architectures have a ripple effect across the data center. And ripples turn into waves as they travel away from the epicenter, in this case leaving security professionals swamped. And like a bad “B-side” disaster flick, the danger isn’t coming from just one side; it’s...
Blog

Click-Fraud Attacks Being Used to Deliver More Sinister Threats

Click-fraud is traditionally thought of as a widespread but low-impact online risk. Using this method of attack, criminals steal money away from pay-per-click (PPC) online advertisers by commanding another person or bot to click on an ad for the purposes of generating a charge per click. No actual interest is generated by these fake clicks, and the...